Productivity Rate Falls for First Time in Six Years

The U.S. production rate fell 0.1% during the first quarter, marking the first such drop since a 0.8% rate of decrease in the first quarter of 1995. The decrease followed a 2% annual rate of productivity growth in the fourth quarter of last year, the Labor Department said today. The report also said unit labor costs jumped by a 5.2% rate in the first quarter. That’s the biggest increase since the

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The U.S. production rate fell 0.1% during the first quarter, marking the first such drop since a 0.8% rate of decrease in the first quarter of 1995. The decrease followed a 2% annual rate of productivity growth in the fourth quarter of last year, the Labor Department said today.

The report also said unit labor costs jumped by a 5.2% rate in the first quarter. That’s the biggest increase since the fourth quarter of 1997, when they rose at a 5.5% rate.

The drop in productivity — the amount of output per hour of work — during the January-March quarter surprised analysts, who generally were expecting an increase of 1% at an annual rate.

Gains in productivity are the key to rising living standards because they allow wages to increase without triggering higher inflation that would eat up those wage gains. However, if productivity falters, pressures for higher wages sometimes force companies to raise prices, causing inflation to kick in.